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Stories from the Greatest Generation

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A Virtual World War II Honor Roll

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Showing Results 1129 - 1136 of 1422

Lester Schrenk
Army Air Corps
Lester
Schrenk
DIVISION: Army Air Corps,
B-17 Ball Turret Gunner
Nov 19, 1923 -
BIRTHPLACE: Long Prairie, MN
HIGHEST RANK: Staff Sergeant
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
SERVED: Nov 19, 1942 -
0
0
HONORED BY: The Eisenhower Foundation

BIOGRAPHY

Lester Schrenk joined the U.S. Army Air Forces on his 19th birthday in November 1942. Even though he still sees perfectly today, he was told he could not become a pilot due to poor eyesight. So this Minnesota farm kid was assigned as a ball turret gunner on a B-17 bomber crew, a real-life 'Master of the Air' flying with the 92nd Bomb Group of the Mighty Eighth Air Force. At 5'11", he was much bigger than most men tasked with squeezing into that very tiny space. Roughly a year later, he was deployed to Europe. Schrenk tells us what the missions were like for a ball turret gunner and he describes a harrowing mission in which his damaged bomber barely made it back to England but not all the way back to base. On his 10th mission - Feb. 22, 1942 to Denmark, aboard the B-17 'Pot o' Gold', his bomber was badly damaged by a German JU-88 over Denmark. Bailing out, he was immediately captured and held prisoner at the Stalag Luft IV camp, surviving harsh conditions and interrogations. Near war’s end, as the Russian Red Army approached from the east, Lester was forced on a death march west, until reaching the British Army and liberation. For decades, Les wondered why the German fighter who wounded his bomber did not finish them off. In 2012, he finally located the German pilot – Hans-Hermann Muller – who had spared the American bomber knowing that if it went down over water, the entire crew would drown. The former enemies would become friends. Courtesy of AVC (American Veterans Center)

PRISONER OF WAR

VIDEOS

Robert I. Schultheis
Navy
Robert
I.
Schultheis
DIVISION: Navy,
Radar Training School
Apr 15, 1927 -
BIRTHPLACE: Bronx, New York City, New York
THEATER OF OPERATION: American
SERVED: Apr 13, 1945 -
0
0
HONORED BY: Wife, Janet K. Schultheis
Sanford L. Schultheis
Navy
Sanford
L.
Schultheis
DIVISION: Navy
May 11, 1921 -
BIRTHPLACE: Bronx, New York City, New York
HIGHEST RANK: Lieutenant, Senior Grade
THEATER OF OPERATION: Pacific
SERVED: Dec 8, 1942 -
0
Jun 18, 1946
0
HONORED BY: Robert I. Schultheis

BIOGRAPHY

Lieutenant, Senior Grade, Sanford L. Schultheis was present for the invasion of Guam where he was responsible for interrogating prisoners and interpreting captured documents. He was thoroughly fluent in the Japanese language.

Myran R. Schultz
Army
Myran
R.
Schultz
DIVISION: Army,
572 AAA AW BN BTRY N
Apr 16, 1919 - Nov 19, 1966
BIRTHPLACE: Minnesota
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
0
0
HONORED BY: Matthew J Schultz
Herman Schuster
Army
Herman
Schuster
DIVISION: Army,
Army National Guard
Nov 8, 1908 - Jul 8, 2000
BIRTHPLACE: Hope, KS
HIGHEST RANK: Brig. General
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
SERVED: Dec 23, 1940 -
0
Nov 19, 1945
0
BATTLE: D-Day Normandy Battle of the Bulge, Battle at Rhine, and conquest of Ruhr
HONORED BY: The Dickinson County Heritage Center and The Eisenhower Foundation

BIOGRAPHY

Herman Schuster was born November 8, 1908 in Hope, KS. He attended the Union Valley School then Hope High School. He was valedictorian of his class of 1926 as well as a member of the football and track team. Schuster went on to graduate from Kansas Wesleyan School of Commerce and the Command Staff College at Fort Leavenworth. In December 23, 1940 he enlisted into the Army National Guard. He served in the 35th Division in Europe throughout World War II and saw action at D-Day landing in Normandy as well as with Patton's 3rd Army, in the Battle of the Bulge, the Rhine crossing and the conquest of the Ruhr. Back in the states, Schuster married Henrietta Bates and had 2 daughters. They lived in Siloam Springs, Arkansas where Shuster worked for Kansas Power and Light in Topeka, KS., retiring as Vice President.

Edward L. Schutte
Army
Edward
L.
Schutte
DIVISION: Army,
14th Armored, 191 Tank Rcon, 89th Calvary Recon., 9th Infantry Recon.
Jul 28, 1924 - Jul 17, 2012
BIRTHPLACE: Kahoka, Missouri
HIGHEST RANK: Platoon Sergeant
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
SERVED: Oct 13, 1944 -
0
Aug 1, 1946
0
HONORED BY: Theresa Brierton

BIOGRAPHY

I graduated from St. Patrick, Missouri High School in 1942. I was proud to be a part of the war effort. I was drafted in at Jefferson Barracks, Missouri on October 13, 1944; received six months of basic training at Fort Knox, Kentucky and received two weeks advanced training at A.P. Hill, Virginia before going overseas to Germany. Germany was a beautiful country that was sure torn up. I was a jeep driver for officers and anybody needing to go someplace. I drove tanks and armored cars in combat and reconnaissance missions. The strangest sight was driving an M-4 tank through Munich and not seeing a single house standing! Once I rode 7 days and 6 nights in a box car with 39 other soldiers. The guys would go to sleep and kick. I have scars yet today to prove it. The Germans would bomb the railroad causing us to go back from the front. I did not live in fear because we were trained to kill or be killed. When I went to town, I carried a pistol. The people of Germany didn't associate much with us. The little kids were friendly because we gave them candy and gum. Accommodations varied in Germany - tents, hotels, German barracks, beer hall. Once I stayed in a house while guarding a pile of German bombs. We went to Mass every Sunday ministered by Army chaplains and once went to midnight Mass in a German church. In our free time, we washed our pants and shirts in gasoline when we had no soap. When we had no meat in our K-rations, we would buy a cow with cigarettes or shoot a deer. Trips to other countries were offered on seniority basis and to a limited number of soldiers. I celebrated my 22nd birthday on the ship back to America in July, 1946. The Statue of Liberty looked a lot nicer coming home than it did when I left, not knowing if I would see it again. About 2 weeks after landing in New York, I got home to Missouri. I was discharged in August, 1946 from Fort Sheridan, near Chicago, Illinois. After the welcome home wore off, life was dull. There weren't any jobs and the ones available had been taken by earlier returning Veterans. I went 9 months before I found a job. After several jobs, my wife and I successfully ran a Western Auto Store in Augusta, Illinois for 49 years retiring in 2001. My wife, Hilda, of 58 years and I have raised eight children, 18 grandchildren, and 10 great-grandchildren. I resented Germany because they started a war over power, which caused hardship and expense, loss of loved ones. They took two years of my life for the Army. But, I was proud to serve our country to have freedom for everyone. Hopefully, the little bit I did helped in some way. Awards earned: Belgian, France Cord., 9th Infantry Division. Good conduct, 1 Battle Star, Occupation Ribbon, and ETO Ribbon. My ranks were Level - T-5; Private, Corporal, & Platoon Sergeant.

Schutte
William C. Schutte
Army Air Corps
William
C.
Schutte
DIVISION: Army Air Corps
Apr 30, 1925 - Dec 16, 1997
BIRTHPLACE: Chicago, Illinois
HIGHEST RANK: 1st LT,
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
SERVED: 1943 -
1
1945
1
HONORED BY: His immediate and extended family to include: his late wife, four children, seven grandchildren and four great grandchildren.

BIOGRAPHY

William (Bill) C. Schutte was born on April 30th, 1925 in Chicago, Illinois to Charles and Frances Schutte and entered Heaven on December 16th, 1997 from Denver, Colorado. After graduating High School he began academic studies at Syracuse University. With a continuing desire to help his country in the war effort he left college and enlisted in the U.S. Army Air Corps as a pilot. He was trained to command B-24s and B-25s, both of which he was highly successful in. After the end of the war his affinity for aviation led him to become an Air Traffic Controller and in 1947 he started his career in this field in Dayton, Ohio. Here he showed his above average capabilities and was quickly promoted up through the governmental ranks (GSA rank). During 1955 he bid on an opening at the much busier airport in Louisville, Kentucky and was awarded the position along with its higher GSA rank. Showing how adept he was for air traffic control at busier airports his superiors encouraged him in 1963 to bid on an opening at the much faster paced, high traffic airport in Denver, Colorado. He was again awarded this position and moved up in the GSA ranks. His finely tuned capabilities as an air traffic controller, at a highly congested airport such as Denver, were on display when he was directed to take over control of two separate situations that were rapidly moving towards mid-air collisions of commercial aircraft. He was able to orchestrate both of these safely and there was no loss of life or property damage suffered in either case. Both times he received a Government Citation for Superior Actions and promoted higher in the GSA rankings. After serving as an esteemed Air Traffic Controller, attaining the rank of GS-14 (extremely high level of expertise in a technical position), he retired in 1973 thoroughly wrung out mentally and physically from the increasing stress of this unbelievably difficult job. On December 16th, 1997 he entered Heaven leaving behind his wife Nancy and four children, Charles, Margaret, John and Rita. He will be remembered always as a Patriot and an outstanding, loving man & father and soldier for God.

Other Service Documents

Nick Scordino
Army
Nick
Scordino
DIVISION: Army,
Army Air Corps
May 27, 1922 -
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
SERVED: Oct 10, 1942 -
0
Nov 22, 1945
0
HONORED BY: Collaborative efforts of Ike's Soldiers & Mickey Strand

BIOGRAPHY

Until Nick joined the military in 1942, he had never been around guns in his life. Over his 3 years of service throughout World War II, he was an MP, a barber, took some aerial gunnery training and aerial munitions mechanics, eventually became a leader in his squadron and was in charge of a P38 fighter plane. His account of the 429th Fighter Squadron's role during the D-Day invasion is now available in the edited interview video.

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The mission of Ike's Soldiers is to honor Dwight D. Eisenhower's legacy through the personal accounts of the soldiers he led and share them with the world.

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"Humility must always be the portion of any man who receives acclaim earned in blood of his followers and sacrifices of his friends."
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Eisenhower Signature

Guildhall Address, London, June 12, 1945